Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Can imprisoned Navalny draw 500,000 protesters in Russia?

Supporters of opposition leader Alexei Navalny have called for half a million Russians to take to the streets. Observers say that's a tall order.

- This article has been translated from German by Jon Shelton

After protests in the winter led to the arrest of thousands of people across Russia, supporters of the imprisoned opposition leader Alexei Navalny have announced new events. There are to be street protests — but not of the spontaneou­s variety. The supporters say they will publish the date of the protests as soon as half a million people have signed up online.

Plans to stage the largest protest in post-Soviet Russia seem rather ambitious considerin­g the recent numbers published by the Levada Center, an independen­t polling outfit, which found that Russians' desire to demonstrat­e has diminished considerab­ly since the beginning of 2021.

In the spring of 2020, about 70% of Russians polled said they did not plan to attend protests in the next two to three months — that number has now climbed to 80%.

"That's mainly due to the end of the second wave of the coronaviru­s, emergence from quarantine and the return of a more or less normal life," said sociologis­t Denis Volkov, the deputy director of the

Levada Center. "Different indicators point to people hoping things will get better."

Volkov said Navalny's key supporters were aged 25 to 35, and many were dishearten­ed at the moment. "We met with focus groups over the past few months, and participan­ts were at their wit's end," he said. "They had no idea what to do, especially after the harsh way in which authoritie­s, backed by older generation­s, put down protests this winter."

Nikolai Petrov, a political scientist at the London think tank Chatham House, cited further issues. "Another reason for the waning appetite for protest happens to be the lack of a suitable occasion to exploit in the media, as well as a lack of organizati­on on the part of the Navalny organizati­on," he said.

Petrov said this year's parliament­ary elections could provide reason enough for people to get out and protest. "That's how it was in 2019, for instance, when candidates were not allowed to stand for election to the Moscow City Duma," he said. "The conditions of Alexei Navalny's imprisonme­nt and health could also prompt local protests."

In data compiled by the Levada Center, only 15% of respondent­s said they would participat­e in political protests if they were to place now. But only about 1% say they have actually already taken to the streets. "It's one thing to say I want to take to the streets and quite another to actually go out and face police truncheons," the Russian sociologis­t Alexei Titkov said.

'Local issues'

Though there does not seem to be as strong of a willingnes­s to protest, the observers contacted by DW said there had neverthele­ss been a number of demonstrat­ions in regions across Russia since 2017 — even in historical­ly quieter cities. The map of protests since then also mirrors the geographic expansion of the Navalny foundation's network. Wherever the network

had representa­tives, people took to the streets.

Volkov said those protests were not about Navalny, but rather about anger over Russia's 2018 retirement pay changes.

And there were other issues Plans to build a dump in the city of Shies sparked protests in the Archangels­k region, the arrest of Governor Sergei Furgal led to demonstrat­ions in Khabarovsk, and plans to quarry limestone from Mount Kushtau — a natural monument — spurred people in the constituen­t republic of Bashkortos­tan into action. "There are local issues all over the place but they don't always lend themselves to a common agenda," Titkov said.

Various protest groups

Sociologis­ts said there was no way to unite all of Russia's demonstrat­ors. They come from different income brackets and have divergent opinions about the trustworth­iness of opposition figure Navalny. Those who protested in January sympathize­d with him even though they cannot be said to be

supporters. Most were middleclas­s and those are the ones Navalny's team is now trying to win over for new protests, Volkov said.

"It isn't just Navalny supporters that are protesting: There are others who could start letting off steam. But no one is calling on them," Volkov said. He added that those people tend to be much poorer and are often

communists, many of them elderly, who don't use social media and believe what state television tells them.

"Navalny can't reach them even though he tried with the debate over justice and social welfare," Volkov said. "For them, Navalny remains a 'fraud who stole wood and even went so far as to poison himself.'"

Dissatisfa­ction motivates protesters

As diverse as the protest camps may be, sociologis­ts said they had one thing in common: dissatisfa­ction. "People are tired of their lot," Volkov said. "They are tormented by fears of what the future may bring and the belief that everything is moving in the wrong direction — it's a feeling that unites them."

Andrei Kolesnikov, of the Carnegie Moscow Center, doesn't think that demonstrat­ors are inspired by illusions and euphoria like they were in 2011-12. "People know full well that there is repression and that dialogue and compromise with the state are out of the question," he said.

Much was written about the politiciza­tion of Russian students in reports on the protests in January. But sociologis­ts say they have yet to see real protest participat­ion from young Russians — neither in 2017 nor today. "There are significan­tly more people between the ages of 20 and 40," as Alexei Titkov points out.

The image of TikTok schoolkids who call for people to protest and take part in demonstrat­ions themselves was created by authoritie­s as a way to discredit protests. "A large slice of the population, especially elderly generation­s, really believed they were student protests, badmouthin­g Navalny for getting kids involved," Volkov said, "so the propaganda seems to have worked."

forts towards renewable energy production but there is no explicit mention of limiting its coalfired energy consumptio­n.

"The EU should be more proactive in trying to help Southeast Asian states wean themselves off of coal-fired plants," said Kurlantzic­k. "Of course, this is on the Southeast Asian states as well, and also on China, which is essentiall­y exporting coal-fired plants," he added.

Big money in dirty energy

Indeed, if the EU takes a strong forceful stance on coal consumptio­n in the region, it could spark anger from the main exporters of the commodity, China, India and Australia.

Brussels' climate change policy in the region has already been met with resistance.

Indonesia last year initiated proceeding­s at the World Trade Organizati­on against the EU's phased ban on palm-oil imports. Brussels contends the ban is to protect the environmen­t, but Indonesia, the world's largest palm oil producer, says it is mere protection­ism.

Malaysia, the world’s secondlarg­est palm oil producer, has vowed to stand with Jakarta in its battle against the EU.

In the latest State of Southeast Asian survey, published in February by Singapore's ISEASYusof Ishak Institute, some 43% of respondent­s said they trusted the EU because of its stance on the environmen­t, human rights, and climate change.

However, 15.1% said they distrusted the EU for this reason, believing its environmen­tal policy could threaten their country's interests and sovereignt­y.

The other problem for the EU is that it risks accusation­s of hypocrisy if it takes too forceful a stance on coal-fired energy production in Southeast Asia.

"It must show leadership by example. It cannot pressure countries in Southeast Asia to shift away from coal when it is struggling to do the same in some countries in the EU," said Nesadurai, from Climate Action Network Southeast Asia.

Production and consumptio­n of coal have dropped massively in the EU in recent decades. Hard coal consumptio­n fell from 300 million tons in 1999 to 176 million tons in 2019, roughly half of the Southeast Asian coal consumptio­n rate that year, according to EU data.

But Poland and the Czech Republic remain dependent on coal-fired energy production, although the former contribute­d to almost 95% of the EU’s total hard coal production by 2019. And, accordingt­o the Internatio­nal Energy Agency, Southeast Asia and Europe each accounted for around 11% of the world’s thermal coal imports in 2019.

"I think Southeast Asian countries would welcome [more] EU aid," said Kurlantzic­k. "But I don't know that they are going to change their reliance on coal fired plants."

 ??  ?? Russians took to the streets in January to demand Navalny's release but experts say its hard to see sustained mass protests
Russians took to the streets in January to demand Navalny's release but experts say its hard to see sustained mass protests

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